Old figures, old rules, old scenery, old articles, old reviews, and old wargamers. Not old school. Just old.
Showing posts with label Don Featherstone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Don Featherstone. Show all posts
Tuesday, 24 December 2013
Three Fathers
On Sunday a rendezvous in a windswept motorway service station saw me taking possession of a package from Tim Gow of Megablitz and more containing various papers from the collection of the late John G Robertson of Dundee, who was well known in wargaming circles in Scotland. Chief amongst them was a copy of Don Featherstone's Wargamers Newsletter Wargamers Yearbook 1966/7, which I had never seen before.
It is a rich source of 1966 goodies and some of them will appear here in due course. However, the thing I have most been interested in is a long article by Don himself entitled The Early Days of Wargaming - The R.L. Stevenson story.
This reports research by one Karl G Zipple of Michigan into Stevenson's wargames at Davos in 1880-1883 and contains some sources I haven't seen before.
The reason it has caught my interest to so great an extent is in the context of George Keef and Georland, who got properly into his stride in 1872, eight years before RLS at Davos. This shows the importance of George Keef as a previously unknown early proponent of wargaming with figures, and earlier than the previously accepted pioneer RLS.
Clearly, whenever people have had toy soldiers there have been people throwing things at them and fighting battles. However, reading Don Featherstone's article reinforced the view that George Keef is now eligible to be counted as one of the early fathers of wargaming, along with HG Wells and Robert Louis Stevenson.
More on this along with the text of the article can be found in these four posts over on the Georland blog.
Wednesday, 4 September 2013
Don Featherstone 1918-2013
Amid all the reports today of the death of Don Featherstone I was wondering what would make a fitting tribute here.
Wargamers Newsletter was on of his greatest achievements, not just for the length of time over which he published it monthly (1962-1980) but the way in the pre internet age it informed and sustained wargamers across the world.
It therefore seems appropriate to let Don's own words speak for him. In issue 201 of December 1978 he confessed he had forgotten to mark the 200th consecutive monthly issue. He then published this article looking back on those 200 issues, including a look back to issue no 1.
We also should not (and will not) forget his many books, which introduced many people to the hobby.
Just me then?
But a serious point - outside of the hobby Don Featherstone had many achievements and a whole other set of published work in his professional life as a physiotherapist, with Southampton FC and elsewhere.
Wargamers Newsletter was on of his greatest achievements, not just for the length of time over which he published it monthly (1962-1980) but the way in the pre internet age it informed and sustained wargamers across the world.
It therefore seems appropriate to let Don's own words speak for him. In issue 201 of December 1978 he confessed he had forgotten to mark the 200th consecutive monthly issue. He then published this article looking back on those 200 issues, including a look back to issue no 1.
We also should not (and will not) forget his many books, which introduced many people to the hobby.
Just me then?
But a serious point - outside of the hobby Don Featherstone had many achievements and a whole other set of published work in his professional life as a physiotherapist, with Southampton FC and elsewhere.
Thursday, 14 June 2012
How to win a war - throw a five and stampede the elephants
From Wargamer's Newsletter #88 of July 1969, and repronted there from the Evening Standard (the London evening newspaper). The article includes sightings of Peter Young, Chris Ellis, and Don Featherstone's elephant rules. Further thoughts on elephants in wargames can be found on Harry P's blog Parum Pugna here.



Wednesday, 6 June 2012
Maverick project #32
My reach might exceed my grasp on this one but yesterday I started indexing all the articles, features and book reviews in the issues of Don Featherstone's Wargamer's Newsletter in my possession.
Every so often I do a trawl through to look for material to post here (entirely with DF's permission, I should add), so the idea is it may save me time in the long term, and it will be nice when it's finished (a bit like my haircut).
I am compiling the index in Excel. At the moment there are separate worksheets for articles, features and book reviews. Once completed I will break the features sheet up into separate sheets for each feature (Battle Report of the Month, Making Your Own Army, The American Scene,Counsels of War, What Makes a Wargamer Tick, Wargamer of the Month etc). I'm not trying to cover things like the Must List, Looking Around, You Write to Us, or From the Clubs.
Information recorded will include issue number, month, year, article, author first name, author last name, content (where appropriate) and period or theme covered.
Yesterday I indexed about 30 issues and reached number 100.
I have a more complete series hereon in. When/if I complete the index for the issues I have access to, I will post a list of the ones I am missing in case anyone can supply the relevant information from them.
I'm actually hoping to stick with this over the next few weeks to complete it fairly quickly. I have had a message from someone who knows I'm doing this, who did the same for the first two hundred issues of Wargames Illustrated, Miniature Wargames and Practical Wargamers but lost all the files when changing computer, so I will try not to follow his example too closely.
Lesser known book by Don Featherstone
Saturday, 15 January 2011
Waterloo refought 1: Don Featherstone
Sunday, 2 January 2011
Battle in the Attic - Don Featherstone in the Daily Telegraph June 10th 1995
Apologies for the quality of the scan - my original is a photocopy of the newspaper article which has cut a little of each edge of the article off - I think it is possible still to understand it and I thought it might be of sufficient interest to post. I am told (see comment below from John T) the publication date was June 10th 1995.
Thursday, 5 August 2010
Tribute to Charles Grant, 1979
In the Editorial to Wargamers Newsletter #208 of July 1979 Don Featherstone wrote this announcement and tribute to Charles Grant.

It is with the greatest regret and sorrow that I report the death of an old friend and veteran wargamer Charles Grant. Apparently it occurred recently and was very sudden but I have no details. Charles was perhaps the most experienced wargamer around, being in the hobby long before I ever became aware of wargaming and his contributions to it, both practical and literary, played a major part in the great advance to its present status. At various stages in my early acquaintance with wargaming, I had stimulating meetings and wargames with Charles, although in recent years we have not seen much of each other. This knowledgeable and experienced senior statesman of our hobby will be sadly missed and there are many of us who will remember him fondly for years to come.
D.F.F.
It is with the greatest regret and sorrow that I report the death of an old friend and veteran wargamer Charles Grant. Apparently it occurred recently and was very sudden but I have no details. Charles was perhaps the most experienced wargamer around, being in the hobby long before I ever became aware of wargaming and his contributions to it, both practical and literary, played a major part in the great advance to its present status. At various stages in my early acquaintance with wargaming, I had stimulating meetings and wargames with Charles, although in recent years we have not seen much of each other. This knowledgeable and experienced senior statesman of our hobby will be sadly missed and there are many of us who will remember him fondly for years to come.
D.F.F.
Sunday, 1 August 2010
Wargamer's Newsletter Rules
Following the comment on the previous post, I dug out my copy of Athena's 1987's publication of the Wargamer's Newsletter Rules.
In my response to the comment, I relied on the contents given on Vintage 20mil, but once I dug out my copy I realised this was not comprehensive.
The rule sets included are:
1. Rules for Ancient Wargames 1000 BC - AD 900 by Tony Bath
2. Medieval Rules by Tony Bath
3. God for Harry! England and St George! Wargame Rules for the Medieval Period by Donald Featherstone
4. Rules for the English Civil War by Donald Featherstone
5. Rules for the 1750 period in Europe by Tony Bath
6. Napoleonic Rules by Donald Featherstone
7. American Civil War Rules by Donald Featherstone
8. Rules for late 19th Century wargames by Donald Featherstone
9. Rules for 1917 period wargames in German S.W. Africa (including rules for early tanks, armoured cars etc) by Donald Featherstone
10. Rules for 1944 (Normandy) Wargames by Phil Barker.
The Athena publication is a 124 page A4 perfect bound booklet with an orange colour.
The second two images are of the original issues of the Tony Bath ancient and Medieval Rules, as Wargamer's Newsletter Handbooks. These were available to order from Donald Featherstone. 8 of them (excluding the Don's medieval and English Civil War rules) are listed in a notice in Wargamer's Newsletter from December 1967 at 3s 6d each or the set of 8 for a guinea, including postage. Also listed is Wargames Terrain for 10s 6d, an illustrated booklet describing how to construct realistic battlefields. I'm not sure when the original sets were first made available, or the order they came out in.
Labels:
Don Featherstone,
Phil Barker,
Tony Bath,
wargame rules
Wednesday, 30 June 2010
Before there was Ian Weekley - there was Bill Holmes and Deltorama
Before there was Ian Weekley, making marvellous buildings to order and having lavishly illustrated articles in the wargames press, there was Bill Holmes.
Bill Holmes set up Deltorama in 1967 as the first wargames construction service, making model buildings for Brigadier Peter Young, among others (as refereed to in Charge!)
Early Wargamer's Newsletters were studded with Deltorama advertisements with line drawings of completed commissions. Sadly Bill died around 1970. In May that year Don Featherstone posted a double page tribute made up of some of these line drawing images.

Before doing a little research for this post, I had never made the connection between Bill Holmes and the war journal featured in Don Featherstone's Solo-Wargaming book, the one with the inspirational North West Frontier campaign and pictures of Tradition 25mm figures.
Don Featherstone writing in Solo-Wargaming, Kaye & Ward 1973
“The late Bill Holmes of Deltorama had a series of such journals in which he recorded the activities of his troops, embellishing these accounts with drawings and photographs of their operations. Using as a background the wonderful buildings for which he was professionally renowned, Bill posed his figures most realistically as they attacked forts … or fought against ambushes in the rocky defiles of the North-West Frontier. There is no limit to the ingenuity that the wargamer can display in compiling a journal – Bill Holmes even went so far as to make his own army forms and letter-headings complete with rubber-stamped markings and so on, and inserted them into the journal to record when an order was received from a higher formation, for example. A journal is very much a personalized affair but the sample pages given on the opposite page (below) can serve as a guide.”
Bill Holmes set up Deltorama in 1967 as the first wargames construction service, making model buildings for Brigadier Peter Young, among others (as refereed to in Charge!)
Early Wargamer's Newsletters were studded with Deltorama advertisements with line drawings of completed commissions. Sadly Bill died around 1970. In May that year Don Featherstone posted a double page tribute made up of some of these line drawing images.
Before doing a little research for this post, I had never made the connection between Bill Holmes and the war journal featured in Don Featherstone's Solo-Wargaming book, the one with the inspirational North West Frontier campaign and pictures of Tradition 25mm figures.
Don Featherstone writing in Solo-Wargaming, Kaye & Ward 1973
“The late Bill Holmes of Deltorama had a series of such journals in which he recorded the activities of his troops, embellishing these accounts with drawings and photographs of their operations. Using as a background the wonderful buildings for which he was professionally renowned, Bill posed his figures most realistically as they attacked forts … or fought against ambushes in the rocky defiles of the North-West Frontier. There is no limit to the ingenuity that the wargamer can display in compiling a journal – Bill Holmes even went so far as to make his own army forms and letter-headings complete with rubber-stamped markings and so on, and inserted them into the journal to record when an order was received from a higher formation, for example. A journal is very much a personalized affair but the sample pages given on the opposite page (below) can serve as a guide.”
Saturday, 27 March 2010
Don Featherstone and the Sands of Time: Terrain, from War Games Digest British Issue September 1960
Back in the day, sand tables were the height of wargaming technology. Here Don Featherstone brings to bear some insights from his other life as a physiotherapist. The sand table through the floor is an interesting variant on the lead soldiers through the ceiling story.
I've checked, and a copy of Sgt Major Sloman's book is currently available on Abebooks at £7.50...


I've checked, and a copy of Sgt Major Sloman's book is currently available on Abebooks at £7.50...
Thursday, 18 March 2010
A 50th anniversary - War Games Digest British Issue September 1960 - My War Games Table and Figures, by Lionel Tarr
A real curiosity is this copy of the British Edition of War Games Digest, edited by Don Featherstone and Tony Bath, from September 1960. A short lived interlude saw a British Edition of the War Games Digest published in March and September, interspersing the US edition produced by Jack Scruby in June and December. This experiment was short lived and ended in tears two years later with a disagreement over editorial policy. This was followed by Jack Scruby launching Table Top Talk, and Don Featherstione starting Wargamers Newsletter,later that year (1962)- so it really was a moment of creative differences..
The Courier's Timeline of the Historical Miniatures Wargaming Hobby has links to Don's article and the editor's exchange on the subject.
I think this must be the second of the British Editions and I will probably post more of the content in the coming months.
As a start, here is Lionel Tarr's article on his war games table and figures for his famous Stalingrad campaign.
I apologise if the scans are difficult to read. As this is 50 year old roneod typescript this is not too surprising. I have run them through the high pass sharpen on paint shop, but it seemed to me it would be of interest to see the article in its original form. The alternative would be to scan for optical character recognition to transcribe the article into text. This would be quite time consuming so for the moment I am following plan A.
Wednesday, 21 October 2009
A year with the Don
Don Featherstone republished this article of his from Wargamers Digest March 1962 in Wargamer's Newsletter 111 in June 1971. A fascinating insight into a formative year.
A Wargamer’s Year
by D. Featherstone
Back in 1962, when wargaming was in its infancy, most of the British wargamers knew each other personally, their friendship and enthusiasm is recalled with nostalgic warmth. Reading through the March 1962 issue of War Games Digest I came across the following article which amply revives the feeling of those days. This month's cover picture of myself and daughter Sally was taken in the same year.
Sitting idly reviewing the events of the past year, I was struck by the amazing number of interesting things that have happened to me wargames-wise since December 1960. I have always realised that the hobby had brought me untold pleasure but did not anticipate so many varied events resulting from collecting model soldiers and fighting battles with them.
JANUARY. Waited with some interest to see who won a rather comic race between Commercial T.V. and the British Broadcasting Corporation, both trying to be first to screen in magazine programmes some filmed stuff taken in my wargames room. Commercial T.V. won and made a very good job of animating cavalry and artillery with a most realistic background of battle noises. The B.B.C. did a more restrained job - but both of the programmes resulted in a lot of correspondence with would-be collectors.
FEBRUARY. Interviewed by the Manchester Guardian, the Daily Herald and the American Forces paper Stars and Stripes, all with pictures, and all calculated to win friends and influence people with wargame interests. Carried on with the campaigns of January both in my house and at Tony Bath's battlefield - think I won the Franco-Prussian War about here! But I lost Rome in the Punic War.
MARCH. Five lights, two cameras, six technicians, a director, interviewer MacDonald Hastings and myself crowded into my small wargames room to film the usual set-up for B.B.C's "TONIGHT" programme. Set-up - the fight for Little Round Top, questions were the usual novice type and the resulting film again brought letters.
Exciting phone call from C.B.S. of New York who seemed to think I was the man they wanted to make a scale model of Gettysburg battlefield not less than 6' x 3' and two days in which to do it! Succeeded, took it down to the home of Field Marshall Montgomery where it was used in the film he made for C.B.S. with Henry Steele Commager, discussing the American Civil War. A most stimulating day spent in and around Monty's Desert caravans and marvelling at the Great Man's effervescence!
Continued Thursday night battles with Tony Bath - don't recall what we did here but those Romans carried on losing the Punic War.
APRIL. The Month of the Convention - great, stimulating, provocative, and inimitable. But we hope to have another one next year! Appeared on T.V. with Brigadier Peter Young when we gave publicity to the Convention.
Asked by Hutchinsons the Publishers to write a book on War Games - began book.
Stonewall Jackson began to chase up the Valley followed by Bath's Federals - in spite of doubling on my tracks, the Union boys were a little too much for me!
MAY. Visited Warwick Hales and Peter Pringle in Chatham, where a most interesting weekend was spent discussing the usual hobby subjects. Watched a demonstration Napoleonic battle between Warwick and Peter, learned some new curses and varied lines of argument over rules. Fought Warwick next morning with Peter as umpire - good battle in which history was altered when I discovered an even stronger defensive formation than the British Square!
Drove to Bristol with Roy Blackman to see Lionel Tarr, whose modern set-up and application never fails to amaze me. Learned a lot, returned home very stimulated and full of admiration for this great stalwart of our hobby.
Continued fighting battles with Tony Bath - won and lost about my usual number. Wrote book in spare time.
JUNE. Peter Young visited me and we spent a very hot Sunday fighting a wargame between Federals and Confederates. At the end of it I knew how Peter had become a Brigadier, won so many medals and stayed alive during W.W. II - but it was good hard and drawn battle! Anyway, we fought to my rules!
Continued with book, fought more battles with Tony and spent a week on holiday, during which I found a shop that sold Airfix model tanks so bought and made a dozen of them en masse during the spare times off the beach!
JULY. Had a most interesting Marlburian battle at Peter Young's house, when he cunningly made himself Umpire and I fought a three-cornered battle with Ian Bale and David Nash. It lasted from 11 a.m. until 7 p.m. when I conceded the game, I attach no blame whatsoever to the gargantuan quantities of excellent food provided by Mrs. Young and liquor by the Brigadier. He also bore me no malice for so violently arguing about his rules - he was the most flexible Umpire!
Spent a lot of time chasing photographers taking shots of staged battles for the book.
AUGUST. Events this month were a little crowded off the screen by the arrival of another little Featherstone - a boy this time who, up to time of going to Press, shows absolutely no aptitude for wargaming.
Book nearly completed - photographers go bankrupt and make life even more difficult.
SEPTEMBER. Visited Bill Gunson at his home in North Wales - he was home on leave from Kuwait. Drove 256 miles each way, glorious scenery, then drove another 120 miles to find a shop in that uncivilised part of the world that sold Airfix figures! Bill's army had not arrived from Kuwait but he had bought lots of modern plastic stuff on his way home via Germany, so we decided to buy some boxes of 00 gauge figures and fight a modern battle (I wasn't going to drive over 500 miles and not have a wargame!).
Finally got them in Llandudno - and had our battle on a dining room table and a large side-board 18" higher so that an intriguing sloping terrain was used!
Book went to publishers - I received part of the advanced royalties! Fought more battles with Tony and lost more than I won!
OCTOBER. Bill Gunson drove 256 miles to spend weekend with me (highly delighted because he did it half-an-hour quicker than I did!). Aided by Carl Reavley (home from Aden) Roy Blackman and Tony Bath, we fixed up the wargame to end all wargames.Using an 'L' shaped table 16" x 12' x 6' and with two armies of 1,200 men each, we fought for about nine hours, with a beer and cheese buffet on one side of us - no result and a fervent urge to fight small scale battles in future!
Tony and I began the Boer Revolt 1885 - in which the Boers aided by a Zulu rising on the West of the Province, attempt to throw the British out of Natal. The British being scattered in various towns and garrisons find it hard to concentrate, but aided by gunboat and landing party made a good fight of it.
NOVEMBER. Boer Rising still going strong - Tony curses the civilians and live stock he has to shepherd to safety and my Boers (masquerading as Confederates) have a couple of small successes but two big defeats.
Soldier Magazine send down Staff Photographer and we have great fun faking shots for article in January edition. Carry on fighting battles with Tony at his house - Jungle Warfare now!
Lot of time spent sorting out fabulous collection of SAE 30mm stuff bought from Bill Gunson (who has now gone over to 20mm figures). Details of surplus stuff elsewhere in book.
DECEMBER. Sit here typing this stuff for the March WGD. Boer Rising still going on - Tony has got a very fair Native rising going in his mythical Continent and my savages had fun last week raiding settlements and cutting throats of soldiers disguised as women settlers!
Note; During this past year, I have also endeavoured to earn a living (my wife and children have become accustomed to such luxuries as food and clothing), read a large number of books on military subjects, painted and made a considerable number of figures, done some high class swapping with various fellow collectors and carried on a large correspondence with other enthusiasts. Life doesn’t get tedious, does it?
Saturday, 6 June 2009
Weird Wargames Technology
From the dawn of time wargamers have been coming up with ingenious (and let's face it, often ridiculous) solutions to problems which may or may not exist, and pursued these enthusiasms far beyond the bounds of common sense. This has resulted in a vast number of proprietary home made devices which have slipped from our collective memory.
I'm not deriding the thought and effort of the inventors of these systems, and I am certainly not poking fun at their willingness to publish them and subject them to scrutiny by others - I think they are worth making accessible, and may help people develop their own thinking.
There is a Heath Robinson feel to some of these gimmicks, while others have so obviously had so much intelligence applied to them that they are completely beyond comprehension - does anyone else remember trying to read the chapter on the Timms War-games Computer in Don Featherstone's Advanced Wargames (which also featured Ron Miles' Rounders)?
The appliances required (bounce sticks, log pins, burst circles etc) often form part of the charm of many sets of rules from the 60s and 70s. While there are any number of professionally manufactured dice, markers and other accessories available to the hobby today, the Barry Bucknell type DIY nature of these earlier gadgets give them a wonderful character all of their own. I will be keeping an eye out for examples of these ideas and devices and will be looking to post a number of them in the future. To start with I have unearthed the Hyper Miniatures System, and the Bloody Angle, below. Please let me know if there is interest in seeing more of this sort of stuff.
I'm not deriding the thought and effort of the inventors of these systems, and I am certainly not poking fun at their willingness to publish them and subject them to scrutiny by others - I think they are worth making accessible, and may help people develop their own thinking.
There is a Heath Robinson feel to some of these gimmicks, while others have so obviously had so much intelligence applied to them that they are completely beyond comprehension - does anyone else remember trying to read the chapter on the Timms War-games Computer in Don Featherstone's Advanced Wargames (which also featured Ron Miles' Rounders)?
The appliances required (bounce sticks, log pins, burst circles etc) often form part of the charm of many sets of rules from the 60s and 70s. While there are any number of professionally manufactured dice, markers and other accessories available to the hobby today, the Barry Bucknell type DIY nature of these earlier gadgets give them a wonderful character all of their own. I will be keeping an eye out for examples of these ideas and devices and will be looking to post a number of them in the future. To start with I have unearthed the Hyper Miniatures System, and the Bloody Angle, below. Please let me know if there is interest in seeing more of this sort of stuff.
Thursday, 7 May 2009
Personalities on Parade
In the late 1970s Battle Magazine published a series of interviews by Don Featherstone of well known wargamers, under the title Personalities on Parade. I posted the interview with Neville Dickinson on the Lone S Ranger, and Doug has posted the Peter Gilder one on Unfashionably Shiny. I have just posted the Bill Lamming interview on the Old Metal Detector, and thought it might be useful to have all three, plus the George Gush piece, in the same place. They are posted below.
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